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Electronic music

Delia Derbyshire recording
electronic music in the BBC Radiophonic WorkshopElectronic music started long
before the invention of the synthesizer with the use of tape loops and analogue
electronics in the 1950s and 1960s. Well known examples include the theme music
to the TV series Doctor Who, recorded in 1963 by Delia Derbyshire and Dick
Mills. Some subcategories of electronic music include electronic dance music,
space, new age, ambient, and the catch-all "electronica," which can sometimes
include all of the above electronic sub-genres, but usually refers to electronic
music without lyrics.

One of the first people to popularize the synthesizer was Wendy Carlos who
performed classical music on the synthesizer on the recording Switched-On Bach.
Space music was popularized by the group Tangerine Dream, among others, as a
precursor to new age music. New age music served to support and perpetuate the
values of the new age movement. Though there is some overlap between the various
sub-genres of electronic music, Brian Eno, the creator of ambient music, claimed
that ambient had a bit of "evil" in it, whereas new age music did not. Eno's
creation was less values-driven than new age; his goal was to create music like
wallpaper, insofar as the listener could listen to or easily ignore the music.

Naturally, many people have met electronic music also in the form of video game
music.